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61 inqatta'a
break up [qatta'a] -
62 kasara
break [Mal kisser, Amh kesere (go broke)] -
63 naqasza
break, ruin [naqassa] -
64 qassafa
break apart; bomb [?]--------revel, eat and drink [?] -
65 tabara
break [thabara] -
66 thabara
break [Sem th-b-r, Akk sheberu, Heb shavar, Syr thbar, Amh sebbere] -
67 zana
break marriage, fornicate [Sem z-n-y, Mal zienja (lust), Heb zona (whore), Syr zanitha, JNA zny (fornicate), Hrs zeno, Tig zena] -
68 صدمة فصل التيار
break shock -
69 ظاهرة الافتصال
break-off phenomenon -
70 حطم
حَطَّمَ \ break sth. down: to demolish: The fireman broke the door down (or broke down the door) to enter the house. break up: to (cause to) fall apart bit by bit; scatter: The ship went on the rocks and broke up. The meeting broke up in disorder. crush: to destroy (an enemy, sb.’s hopes, etc.). destroy: to break to pieces; ruin. shatter: to break suddenly into small pieces: The glass fell and shattered on the floor. wreck: to destroy; ruin: The ship was wrecked in a storm. Illness wrecked his chances of winning the election. smash: to break violently into small pieces: He smashed my window. The egg fell and smashed. \ See Also تحطم (تَحَطَّم) -
71 crush
حَطَّمَ \ break sth. down: to demolish: The fireman broke the door down (or broke down the door) to enter the house. break up: to (cause to) fall apart bit by bit; scatter: The ship went on the rocks and broke up. The meeting broke up in disorder. crush: to destroy (an enemy, sb.’s hopes, etc.). destroy: to break to pieces; ruin. shatter: to break suddenly into small pieces: The glass fell and shattered on the floor. wreck: to destroy; ruin: The ship was wrecked in a storm. Illness wrecked his chances of winning the election. smash: to break violently into small pieces: He smashed my window. The egg fell and smashed. \ See Also تحطم (تَحَطَّم) -
72 destroy
حَطَّمَ \ break sth. down: to demolish: The fireman broke the door down (or broke down the door) to enter the house. break up: to (cause to) fall apart bit by bit; scatter: The ship went on the rocks and broke up. The meeting broke up in disorder. crush: to destroy (an enemy, sb.’s hopes, etc.). destroy: to break to pieces; ruin. shatter: to break suddenly into small pieces: The glass fell and shattered on the floor. wreck: to destroy; ruin: The ship was wrecked in a storm. Illness wrecked his chances of winning the election. smash: to break violently into small pieces: He smashed my window. The egg fell and smashed. \ See Also تحطم (تَحَطَّم) -
73 shatter
حَطَّمَ \ break sth. down: to demolish: The fireman broke the door down (or broke down the door) to enter the house. break up: to (cause to) fall apart bit by bit; scatter: The ship went on the rocks and broke up. The meeting broke up in disorder. crush: to destroy (an enemy, sb.’s hopes, etc.). destroy: to break to pieces; ruin. shatter: to break suddenly into small pieces: The glass fell and shattered on the floor. wreck: to destroy; ruin: The ship was wrecked in a storm. Illness wrecked his chances of winning the election. smash: to break violently into small pieces: He smashed my window. The egg fell and smashed. \ See Also تحطم (تَحَطَّم) -
74 smash
حَطَّمَ \ break sth. down: to demolish: The fireman broke the door down (or broke down the door) to enter the house. break up: to (cause to) fall apart bit by bit; scatter: The ship went on the rocks and broke up. The meeting broke up in disorder. crush: to destroy (an enemy, sb.’s hopes, etc.). destroy: to break to pieces; ruin. shatter: to break suddenly into small pieces: The glass fell and shattered on the floor. wreck: to destroy; ruin: The ship was wrecked in a storm. Illness wrecked his chances of winning the election. smash: to break violently into small pieces: He smashed my window. The egg fell and smashed. \ See Also تحطم (تَحَطَّم) -
75 wreck
حَطَّمَ \ break sth. down: to demolish: The fireman broke the door down (or broke down the door) to enter the house. break up: to (cause to) fall apart bit by bit; scatter: The ship went on the rocks and broke up. The meeting broke up in disorder. crush: to destroy (an enemy, sb.’s hopes, etc.). destroy: to break to pieces; ruin. shatter: to break suddenly into small pieces: The glass fell and shattered on the floor. wreck: to destroy; ruin: The ship was wrecked in a storm. Illness wrecked his chances of winning the election. smash: to break violently into small pieces: He smashed my window. The egg fell and smashed. \ See Also تحطم (تَحَطَّم) -
76 split
اِنْشَطَرَ \ split: to break apart: His trousers were so tight that they split when he bent down. \ اِنْشِقاق \ split: a splitting; a tear or crack. \ تَجَزَّأ \ split: to break apart: His trousers were so tight that they split when he bent down. \ جَزَّأَ \ split: to divide; break apart: He split the log with an axe. His trousers were so tight that they split when he bent down. Let’s split the cost between us. \ شَطَرَ \ split: to divide; break apart: He split the log with an axe. His trousers were so tight that they split when he bent down. Let’s split the cost between us. \ See Also انشطر (اِنْشَطَرَ)، قسم (قَسَّمَ) \ فَلَقَ \ split: to divide; break apart: He split the log with an axe. His trousers were so tight that they split when he bent down. \ فَلْق \ split: a splitting; a tear or crack. \ مَشْطور \ split. \ مُنْفَصِم \ split. \ See Also مَشْقوق -
77 انهار
اِنْهَارَ \ break up: to fall apart bit by bit. collapse: fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man, (of one’s health, of a business or plan, etc.) break down; be ruined. crumble: to break or fall into very small pieces: The mud wall was crumbling with age. give: to bend (under weight or pressure). give way: to break (under weight): The wooden bridge gave way under the heavy bus. \ See Also تداعى (تَدَاعَى)، سقط (سَقَطَ) -
78 collapse
اِنْهَارَ \ break up: to fall apart bit by bit. collapse: fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man, (of one’s health, of a business or plan, etc.) break down; be ruined. crumble: to break or fall into very small pieces: The mud wall was crumbling with age. give: to bend (under weight or pressure). give way: to break (under weight): The wooden bridge gave way under the heavy bus. \ See Also تداعى (تَدَاعَى)، سقط (سَقَطَ) -
79 crumble
اِنْهَارَ \ break up: to fall apart bit by bit. collapse: fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man, (of one’s health, of a business or plan, etc.) break down; be ruined. crumble: to break or fall into very small pieces: The mud wall was crumbling with age. give: to bend (under weight or pressure). give way: to break (under weight): The wooden bridge gave way under the heavy bus. \ See Also تداعى (تَدَاعَى)، سقط (سَقَطَ) -
80 give
اِنْهَارَ \ break up: to fall apart bit by bit. collapse: fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man, (of one’s health, of a business or plan, etc.) break down; be ruined. crumble: to break or fall into very small pieces: The mud wall was crumbling with age. give: to bend (under weight or pressure). give way: to break (under weight): The wooden bridge gave way under the heavy bus. \ See Also تداعى (تَدَاعَى)، سقط (سَقَطَ)
См. также в других словарях:
Break — (br[=a]k), v. t. [imp. {broke} (br[=o]k), (Obs. {Brake}); p. p. {Broken} (br[=o] k n), (Obs. {Broke}); p. pr. & vb. n. {Breaking}.] [OE. breken, AS. brecan; akin to OS. brekan, D. breken, OHG. brehhan, G. brechen, Icel. braka to creak, Sw. braka … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Break — (br[=a]k), v. i. 1. To come apart or divide into two or more pieces, usually with suddenness and violence; to part; to burst asunder. [1913 Webster] 2. To open spontaneously, or by pressure from within, as a bubble, a tumor, a seed vessel, a bag … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
break — ► VERB (past broke; past part. broken) 1) separate into pieces as a result of a blow, shock, or strain. 2) make or become inoperative; stop working. 3) interrupt (a continuity, sequence, or course). 4) fail to observe (a law, regulation, or… … English terms dictionary
break — vb Break, crack, burst, bust, snap, shatter, shiver are comparable as general terms meaning fundamentally to come apart or cause to come apart. Break basically implies the operation of a stress or strain that will cause a rupture, a fracture, a… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
break — [brāk] vt. broke, broken, breaking [ME breken < OE brecan < IE base * bhreg > BREACH, BREECH, Ger brechen, L frangere] 1. to cause to come apart by force; split or crack sharply into pieces; smash; burst 2. a) … English World dictionary
break — / brāk/ vb broke / brōk/, bro·ken, / brō kən/, break·ing, / brā kiŋ/ vt 1 a: violate transgress break the law … Law dictionary
break — [n1] fissure, opening breach, cleft, crack, discontinuity, disjunction, division, fracture, gap, gash, hole, rent, rift, rupture, schism, split, tear; concepts 230,757 Ant. association, attachment, binding, combination, fastening, juncture break… … New thesaurus
Break — (br[=a]k), n. [See {Break}, v. t., and cf. {Brake} (the instrument), {Breach}, {Brack} a crack.] 1. An opening made by fracture or disruption. [1913 Webster] 2. An interruption of continuity; change of direction; as, a break in a wall; a break in … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
break-up — break ups also breakup 1) N COUNT: usu N of n, n N The break up of a marriage, relationship, or association is the act of it finishing or coming to an end because the people involved decide that it is not working successfully. Since the break up… … English dictionary
break up — {v.} 1. To break into pieces. * /The workmen broke up the pavement to dig up the pipes under it./ * /River ice breaks up in the spring./ 2. {informal} To lose or destroy spirit or self control. Usually used in the passive. * /Mrs. Lawrence was… … Dictionary of American idioms
break up — {v.} 1. To break into pieces. * /The workmen broke up the pavement to dig up the pipes under it./ * /River ice breaks up in the spring./ 2. {informal} To lose or destroy spirit or self control. Usually used in the passive. * /Mrs. Lawrence was… … Dictionary of American idioms